Tuesday, Sep. 5th, 2017

Archery hunter attacked by grizzly in Gravelly Mountains

An archery hunter survived a grizzly bear attack in the southern Gravelly Mountains Monday morning.
 
The incident occurred when two archery hunters surprised a grizzly feeding on a carcass. The hunters yelled at the bear which immediately attacked. Both hunters had bear spray, one deployed it while the other did not. The bear went after the hunter who did not use his bear spray.
 
The hunter with bear spray deployed his can on the bear as it mauled his partner. The bear then retreated. The attacked hunter sustained non-life-threatening injuries to his head, shoulder, arms and thigh. He was treated at the Madison Valley Medical Center in Ennis.
 
Grizzly bears are common in the Gravelly Mountains, which are part of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.
                                                                 painting by Sept 2017 Cover Artist Casey Norris
Archery hunters should take every possible precaution when hunting in bear country. Bear country means anywhere in the western half of the state. All hunters should:
 
·         carry bear spray AND be ready to use it at a second’s notice;
·         hunt with a partner, leave detailed plans with someone and check-in periodically;
    •    pay attention to fresh bear sign. Look for bear tracks, scat, and concentrations of natural foods;
    •    use caution when hunting areas that have evidence of bear activity or areas with scavenging birds such as magpies, ravens, or crows;
    •    get harvested big game out of the woods quickly;
    •    upon returning to a site where harvested game is left unattended, study the site at a distance for any movement or changes and signal your approach by making plenty of noise;
    •    never attempt to frighten or haze a bear from a carcass;
    •    contact FWP if a bear has consumed a carcass or covered it with debris rendering it unsalvageable.
 
Most grizzly bears will typically leave an area if they sense human presence. Hunters who observe a grizzly bear or suspect a bear is nearby should leave the area.
 
If you encounter a grizzly, stay calm, don't run, and assess the situation by trying to determine if the bear is actually aware of you. Is it, for instance, threatening or fleeing? Always keep the bear in sight as you back away, and leave the area.
 
For more on bears, visit FWP's website at fwp.mt.gov; then click Be Bear Aware. Bear resistant products are described on the Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee's website at www.igbconline.org.  A “How to Hunt Safely in Grizzly Country” brochure is also available at FWP regional offices.

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Monday, Sep. 4th, 2017

HUNTERS BE CAREFUL!

People are asking about how the dry conditions and fire danger will affect hunting seasons.  FWP is not recommending that the Fish and Wildlife Commission close hunting seasons.  “Because of widely variable conditions and different types of hunting scenarios across the state, that is a decision rightly left to an individual landowner, a block management cooperator, or a land manager.  If a private landowner or a land management agency such as the Forest Service or Bureau of Land Management makes the decision to restrict or postpone hunting or other activity on their property, that is a decision we respect and accept,” said FWP Director Martha Williams.

Williams continued, “It is critical to be careful, and be safe.  Hunters have to take personal responsibility to prevent wildfires and keep themselves and the property and lives of others safe.  In conditions like these, hunters should only drive on pavement or gravel roads.” Due to fire danger, currently more than 80 block management areas (BMAs) are restricted or closed at the request of landowners.

FWP asks hunters to be safe by following these fire safety precautions:
·         Park your vehicle on bare ground or ground completely void of vegetation.
·         Drive only on paved and well graveled roads.
·         After you leave an area, wait for few minutes to make sure that a fire has not started where your vehicle was parked.
·         Bring along a fire extinguisher or water-filled weed sprayer, shovel or axe.
·         Camp only in designated camping areas.
·         Smoke only inside buildings or vehicles.
·         Check on any fire restrictions in place in the area where you are hunting.
·         Consider limiting activity until fire danger lessens.

MORE INFO:
The most current list of closed BMAs can be found on the FWP website at fwp.mt.gov/hunting/hunterAccess/blockman/.  Those who do not have access to the internet can check in with their FWP regional office.  Closure signs are also posted onsite at BMAs.

For FWP lands, hunters and recreationists should check updates on fire-related restrictions and closures at state parks, fishing access sites or other FWP properties online at fwp.mt.gov/news/restrictions.

In Montana, fire restrictions are often coordinated with land management agencies and the counties. Typically, Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks follows the lead of the county where its land is located.  However, fire restrictions can vary from county to county depending on local conditions. A good online resource is https://firerestrictions.us/.  You can search for Montana and find the latest restrictions, by county. To go directly to the Montana page, click https://firerestrictions.us/mt/.

Being knowledgeable about current restrictions and fire safe behavior will help us all prevent more wildfires. Below are resources for more information on fires and restrictions:
Inciweb.nwcg.gov/state/27  is a multiagency website that serves as a clearing house for active fire information across the country. It’s easy to search for Montana and see most of the active fires burning in the state.  Each fire has its own web page with current information, such as area closure maps, fire activity and any evacuation notices.

Be aware that in many instances fire managers will close the area around the fire to ensure public and fire fighter safety. These local closures could include areas people might want to hunt or camp, so checking in here is a good step in making sure you have the latest information.

Another great resource is the Montana Department of Natural Resources and Conservation’s interactive wildland fire map: gis.dnrc.mt.gov/apps/firemap. This interactive mapping tool shows all of the fires burning in the state and gives the user an idea of recent fire activity. Users can select different layers to view various information and for those folks concerned about specific locations, the base layer provide a high-resolution map or aerials of Montana.

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Thursday, Aug. 31st, 2017

UberEATS app launches in Bozeman

Starting today, Aug 31, 2017, Bozeman-area residents and visitors will be able to order much of their favorite food from local restaurants and have it delivered by UberEATS seven days a week. At launch, UberEATS is offering delivery of full menus from more than 20 favorite Bozeman-area restaurants.

"We're partnering with a bunch of great Bozeman restaurants so customers can get the food they love quickly and conveniently, no matter what they like best," said Kiran Vinta, UberEATS general manager. "UberEATS offers an easy and reliable way for anyone to get their favorite food–no matter what they’re doing, where they are, or what time it is."

The free, standalone UberEATS app is available for both iOS and Android. Notable restaurants participating in Bozeman include Garage, Stuffed Crepes & Waffles, La Parilla and Biankini’s among others. Food prices are set by the restaurants themselves and Uber will add a booking fee of $5.99. Just like with Uber's rides business, customers will always see prices upfront so they know what they'll be paying before they order.

This is UberEATS’ second foray into Montana. UberEATS launched in Missoula on Monday. The UberEATS Bozeman service area will include downtown and the Montana State University Campus.

UberEATS is now offered in 115 cities in 28 countries across the globe, and the number of customers using the platform is growing rapidly. Many restaurant partners have indicated the service has led to a uptick in their level of business, as it gives them access to new customers. A video released by UberEATS last year includes testimony from restaurant owners in Los Angeles and Chicago about the positive effects of using the UberEATS platform.

UberEATS offers food delivery though an app separate from Uber's rideshare service because requesting a ride and ordering a meal are two different experiences. The similarity, however, is that Uber makes both effortless. The same technology company that brought people rides at the touch of a button is now doing the same for food.

UberEATS also offers new economic opportunity for delivery partners in Bozeman. Those interested in delivering meals via UberEATS can visit the delivery partner page at www.uber.com/deliver.

 

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Wednesday, Aug. 30th, 2017

New Fire Restrictions for SW Montana

Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks’ properties in Park County have moved to Stage 1 fire restrictions. This includes Fishing Access Sites, State Parks, and Wildlife Management areas.
 
Also, effective Saturday, Bannack State Park (Beaverhead County) and Lewis and Clark Caverns State Park (Jefferson County) will no longer be exempted from all Stage I fire restrictions (these Parks previously had exemptions to allow for fires within established rings or grills).
 
FWP follows the counties in entering fire restrictions.
 
Following are the list of restrictions under Stage I:
 
In those areas mentioned above, the following acts are prohibited until further notice:
    1    Building maintaining, attending, or using a fire or campfire. (Note exemptions below)
    2    Smoking, except within an enclosed vehicle or building, a developed recreation site or while stopped in an area at least three feet in diameter that is barren or cleared of all flammable materials.
Exemptions:
    1    Persons with a written permit that specifically authorizes the otherwise prohibited act.
    2    Persons using a device fueled solely by liquid petroleum or LPG fuels that can be turned on and off.
    3    Persons conducting activities in those designated areas where the activity is specifically authorized by written posted notice.
    4    Any Federal, State, or local officer, or member of an organized rescue or firefighting force in the performance of an official duty.
    5    All land within a city boundary is exempted.
Individuals may be fined up to $5,000 or imprisoned up to 6 months for violating the noted fire restrictions.
 
Also, an exemption does not absolve an individual or organization from liability or responsibility for any fire started by the exempted activity.
 
For updates on restrictions and closures around the state, go to: http://fwp.mt.gov/news/restrictions/droughtDetails.html.

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Big Sky Trail Closed After Partially Consumed Elk Found

The Big Sky Community Organization investigated a report of a dead, partially consumed elk next to the Uplands Trail located off Grey Drake Road southeast of the Big Sky Town Center Tuesday morning.
 
The Organization confirmed the report and the Uplands Trail has been closed. The Ralph’s Pass Trail has been closed at its halfway point as well.
 
The Hummocks Trail will remain open.
 
The area will be monitored and when the carcass has been consumed, the trail will be reopened.
 
FWP does not have confirmation as to how the elk died or what is currently feeding on it.
 
This is a proactive closure to ensure human safety due to possible bear presence.  
 
Please contact the Big Sky Community Organization at 406-993-2112 for more information.

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Tuesday, Aug. 29th, 2017

First Interstate Bank Foundation Partners in Helping Fund New Gallatin Valley YMCA

The Gallatin Valley YMCA is honored to be the recipient of a $100,000 capital campaign contribution from First Interstate Bank Foundation.  Throughout the construction of the new Gallatin Valley YMCA, located at the corner of Baxter and Love Lane, First Interstate Bank has been a terrific partner as a lender and now the Foundation as a large capital contributor.

Andrea Stevenson, CEO of the Gallatin Valley YMCA, said, “The new Gallatin Valley YMCA is built only with the help of our community. Businesses like First Interstate Bank Foundation ensure that the new Y can offer a community center offering people of all ages, races, religions and demographics the opportunity to participate in programs that help build a healthy mind, spirit and body.  Since the Y receives no national funding from Y-USA or government entities for construction, the donation from First Interstate Bank Foundation is critical in helping reach the $6 million dollar first phase funding goal. Currently $5 million has been raised towards the $6 million-dollar goal. The gift from First Interstate Bank Foundation definitely helps us move closer to completing funding for the first phase of the new Gallatin Valley YMCA.”

“We have employees all across our First Interstate footprint that are somehow involved with the Y, whether that be using their facilities and programs or participating on their local boards,” said Scott Levandowski, President of First Interstate Bank in Bozeman.  “It is an integral part of not only our communities’ health and wellbeing, but that of our own employees.  With that being said, I can’t think of an organization that provides the programs or services that the YMCA provides to every age and ability. We are proud to serve as a community sponsor in this very worthy endeavor.”

Presentation of the check took place at the new Gallatin Valley YMCA on Tuesday, August 29th at 10am. Several First Interstate Bank leaders as well as the First Interstate Bank Foundation will be attendance along with several of the young students who they YMCA serves with summer camp programs and athletic leagues.

For more information on the Gallatin Valley or how you can support its community efforts, please visit www.gallatinvalleyymca.org or call 406-994-9622.

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Friday, Aug. 25th, 2017

Calling anyone who needs an engineer

Calling anyone who needs an engineer: Montana State University engineering students are here to help.
 
Each year, groups of seniors from MSU’s College of Engineering work to design, analyze, fabricate and troubleshoot creations that they then display during the college’s biannual Engineering Design Fair, which will be held this year in December in the Strand Union Building.
 
The Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering and the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering are currently looking for companies, citizens and MSU faculty interested in sponsoring these projects, which represent a culmination of the knowledge the up-and-coming engineers have learned in their chosen fields.

“Sponsors have an opportunity to address their engineering design challenges while helping to train the next generation of engineers,” said Robb Larson, associate professor of mechanical and industrial engineering.
 
Sponsors pay for supplies used in the project and are involved in decision-making, including budgets, Larson said.
 
Past projects have included a variety of robotic vehicles and research devices, implements to aid in ranching, mechanisms to help those with physical disabilities, custom laboratory equipment for undergraduate labs and sustainable energy devices.
 
“Projects can involve a range of topics including mechanisms, thermal systems, fluids, structures, building systems, instrumentation and control, engineering trade studies and advanced modeling, or combinations of several issues,” Larson said.
 
Because the college’s enrollment has grown, Larson said, there is more opportunity for sponsored projects than in the past - and more need for sponsors.
 
“This is a great opportunity for MSU researchers who may have need for specially designed equipment for their labs,” Larson said. “We’ve had students design for researchers in engineering, physics, the biological sciences and agriculture.”
 
“Also, lots of MSU faculty have used the senior design course to design and build instructional laboratory equipment,” he said. “Students and faculty both can get an excellent outcome from those connections.”
 
Larson, who teaches the two-semester capstone sequence with David Miller, associate professor of mechanical and industrial engineering, said MSU’s engineering capstone teams have won national student design competitions in a variety of areas and generated innovative ideas and solutions for sponsors in many disciplines.

Under the guidance of a faculty adviser, student teams work with the sponsor on project details and specifications. The students perform research, consider alternatives, perform a thorough engineering analysis, create accurate computer models, produce detailed engineering drawings of the preferred design and collect results in a formal design report. Finally, the students create and test a functional prototype and deliver it to the sponsor.

Companies, MSU faculty members or individuals interested in more information about sponsoring a mechanical engineering project should contact Larson at 406-994-6420 or rlarson@me.montana.edu; or David Miller, 406-994-6285, dmiller@me.montana.edu. For those interested in sponsoring projects with students in computer and electrical engineering, contact Todd Kaiser, 406-994-7276 or tjkaiser@montana.edu.

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Thursday, Aug. 24th, 2017

MSU grad wins grand prize in university’s 125th anniversary poster contest

A Montana State University graduate now working a professional freelance designer won the grand prize in the university’s 125th anniversary poster design contest. Additionally, an MSU student, a Bozeman high school student and a member of the Bozeman community also received cash prizes.
 
Kelsey Dzintars, a graphic designer who graduated from MSU in 2009 with honors and is now a professional designer, won $1,000 for her design, which prominently features a bold line drawing of the head of a bobcat, the school’s mascot. Dzintars’s poster will be used to promote the anniversary throughout the state. Events begin Feb. 16, 2018, and will run throughout the year.

 
MSU President Waded Cruzado said that the contest drew 114 entries from across the region. The university was thrilled with both the number and the quality of the submissions, she said.
 
“We thank all of the entrants for their excellence. There were so many creative expressions of Montana State University that the judges had a difficult time making the final selection,” said Cruzado, who was one of the judges, whose number included other university leaders and design professionals.
 
Other winners and their categories included Anna Pierce, an MSU student from Lewiston, Idaho, who won first place in the MSU student category. She will receive a $1,000 cash prize.
 
Quaid Cey, a student at Bozeman High School, was the first place winner in the Montana high school student category. Cey also receives a $1,000 prize, as did Patrick Hoffman from Bozeman, who was the first place winner in the community category.
 
All of the entries will be on display at MSU’s Exit Gallery from Feb. 5-23, Cruzado said.
 
MSU’s two-day 125th anniversary celebration, set for Feb. 16-18, will begin with the university’s Awards for Excellence dinner honoring MSU’s top seniors and their mentors. The Bobcat Birthday Bash, an all-day event centered on the MSU Centennial Mall and Romney Oval, is scheduled Feb. 17, 2018. The event will feature ice skating, a Ferris wheel, music and food, tours of campus programs and inspiring lectures. In addition, the Associated Students of MSU will lead winter games for students, which will include an opening ceremony and other activities. All events are free and open to the public.

“We invite one and all to join us in what we believe will be a memorable event,” Cruzado said.
 
For more information about the Bobcat Birthday Bash, go to montana.edu/125.

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Tuesday, Aug. 22nd, 2017

MontanaPBS director Eric Hyyppa tapped as president of National Educational Telecommunications Association

Eric Hyyppa, director and general manager of MontanaPBS based at Montana State University, has been selected as the president of the National Educational Telecommunications Association, the NETA board announced today.
 
Hyyppa will succeed Skip Hinton, who has served as NETA’s president for 28 years. Hyyppa begins his duties on Nov. 1 at NETA headquarters in Columbia, South Carolina.
 
“Eric is extremely well-respected among PBS station leaders and the national leadership,” said Tom Rieland, chair of NETA’s board of directors and president/CEO of WOSU Public Media. “I’m confident his energy and focus on NETA’s strategic goals, which he helped frame, will greatly enhance the value of NETA to stations across the country.”

 
Hyyppa, who is a Montana native, said he is honored to be asked to work on a national public media platform.
 
"I'm honored, and I'm grateful to the board for the opportunity to lead this exceptional organization of dedicated and talented professionals," Hyyppa said. "NETA plays an essential role in public media, supporting stations and increasing their service to their communities. I am passionate about NETA’s role in supporting stations and committed to our education mission."

Hyyppa has a bachelor’s degree in computer science from MSU. He began his career as the station’s computer system administrator in 1995. In 2003, he was named the station’s information technology manager. He became director and general manager of KUSM/MontanaPBS in January 2008, following a transitional year as its interim general manager.

 
During Hyyppa’s tenure, MontanaPBS grew from a single station to a statewide network of six stations, more than 20 translators and a satellite delivery service that reaches the smallest communities in the state. Hyyppa expanded local production, including a number of nationally distributed programs, developed statewide support and has been a leader in the use of technology for highly efficient station operations. As general manager, Hyyppa has overseen the launch of a major and planned giving program, increased coverage of local news and public affairs and placed a stronger emphasis on education, specifically leveraging the PBS LearningMedia platform in Montana.

 
Hyyppa currently serves on the Public Broadcasting Service board of directors. He is past chair of the board of directors of America’s Public Television Stations, the public television Affinity Group Coalition, the Organization of State Broadcasting Executives and NETA’s board of directors. He also serves on the board of directors of the Montana Broadcasters Association and the board of directors of the Friends of MontanaPBS, and he is a member of the Montana Ambassadors, a volunteer organization of state leaders in business and education. He is a former member of the Society of Motion Picture Television Engineers and the Society of Broadcast Engineers.

Aaron Pruitt, associate general manager and director of content for MontanaPBS, has been named interim director and general manager. Pruitt, who oversees programming, operations and content production, has been with the organization for 23 years.
 
MontanaPBS is an educational outreach service of the Montana University System, a partnership of MSU and the University of Montana. The service provides educational, historical, arts and civic programming, as well as related educational outreach services to the state, serving more than 400 Montana communities and reaching nearly every Montana home.

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Monday, Aug. 21st, 2017

MSU students join teams across the country in launching balloons to view solar eclipse

As crowds jockeyed to watch the first coast-to-coast total solar eclipse in nearly a century, a team of Montana State University students focused on creating an unprecedented, 80,000-foot view of the celestial event for a worldwide audience as part of a project that MSU started in 2014.
 
At the airport here, the students pointed radio dishes at helium-filled balloons equipped with cameras, joining 54 other teams stationed along the eclipse’s path in an effort to livestream aerial video to NASA’s website.
 

Teams from Oregon’s North Medford High School, New Mexico State University, Pellissippi State Community College in Tennessee and the University of Alabama in Huntsville were among those participating in the MSU-coordinated Eclipse Ballooning Project.
 
Like the other 54 teams, the MSU team launched their balloons about an hour before the peak of the eclipse so that the cameras would reach the desired altitude and have the best view during the roughly two-minute period when the moon completely obscured the sun.
 
"Everything on our end was successful," said Sara Stafford, a junior majoring in electrical engineering at MSU who helped launch the MSU balloons. Using predictions for prevailing winds, she helped select the MSU team's launch site at Camas National Wildlife Refuge, roughly 30 miles northwest of Rexburg.

"We got all our balloons in the air," she said.
 
The MSU team launched a total of four balloons: two equipped with the standard live video system, one with a specialized infrared camera for capturing images of the sun’s atmosphere as part of a student-led experiment, and one with a 360-degree camera provided by collaborators from University of Brasilia in Brazil who came to Idaho for the eclipse.

As the moon appeared to slowly consume the sun, the MSU team tapped away on laptops under an awning at the airport as they attempted to connect with the video signal from their balloons.
 
Meanwhile, other team members, friends and family watched a large television screen that displayed video captured by the Central Washington University team, which launched from Culver, Oregon. That video showed the curvature of the planet against the blackness of space, and the shadow of the approaching eclipse.

The MSU team, as well as the team from University of North Dakota that joined MSU at the Rexburg airport, struggled to establish their video connection, possibly because of an increase in radio noise that they observed.
 In this photo provided by Montana State University the corona of the first coast to coast total solar eclipse in over a century is captured Monday, August 21, 2017 at the Camas National Wildlife Refuge in Hamer, ID. (Kelly Gorham/Montana State University)

As the moon aligned with the sun and plunged Rexburg into eerie daytime darkness, the crowd here let out whoops of excitement, watching in wonder as the sun's wispy atmosphere, called the corona, became visible.
 
When the sun shifted enough to again reveal the sun's bright rays, the MSU team gathered around the display screen, watching the 80,000-foot view of the eclipse on video captured by the Wyoming Space Grant Consortium's team, called the Space Cowboys.
 
"I'm glad it worked for someone," said Casey Coffman, a senior majoring in computer engineering at MSU. "That's all I wanted."
 
"My favorite part was when we just decided to go out and watch the eclipse," he said.
 
"That was really cool," said Denise Buckner, student leader for the University of North Dakota high-altitude ballooning team who is earning her master's in space studies.
 
"Even though we didn't get live video, overall it was a success," she said, adding that their team used the opportunity to send an ozone sensor to near-space as part of an experiment to observe the atmospheric effects of the eclipse.
 
"We couldn't have done it without all of the teams coming together like this," she said.
 
"I'm excited that this was the first time that anyone has ever livestreamed aerial video of a total solar eclipse using high-altitude balloons," said Angela Des Jardins, an assistant research professor in the Department of Physics in MSU’s College of Letters and Science and director of the Montana Space Grant Consortium at MSU. "It was also the first time that there has been such a large-scale coordinated launch of high-altitude balloons from coast to coast.”

"One of the exciting things now is that the teams will retrieve their payloads and upload the video and photos," she said. The camera system on the balloons were designed to record, as well as livestream, the view of the eclipse from 80,000 feet, she explained.
 
Des Jardins first proposed the Eclipse Ballooning Project in 2014 as a way to bring together high-altitude ballooning programs across the country and provide a unique perspective of the 2017 solar eclipse while engaging students in hands-on learning.
 
One of the MSU balloons also carried a sample of bacteria as part of a NASA-sponsored experiment to better understand how such hardy microorganisms might fare on Mars after hitching a ride on spacecraft. The atmosphere at 80,000 feet resembles the surface atmosphere on Mars, and the dim lighting created by the eclipse adds further similarity, according to Des Jardins.

NASA distributed the bacteria samples, embedded on small metal tags, to 34 of the project teams and will collect the samples once the balloons’ cameras and other equipment parachute to Earth.

Since 2014, MSU students, primarily undergraduates in the College of Engineering, have worked to design and fabricate the cameras, balloon-tracking system, software, receiver dishes and other equipment. The project received a significant grant from NASA in 2015, and the live video ballooning system was distributed to the other teams at workshops held at MSU in 2016. Other teams helped to test and refine the system.

There was a sense that intensity of the experience crowned what has, for many of the students, been years of hard work.
 
"I was just excited to see the eclipse, and after that, to see video from teams across the country who had a successful video stream," said Micaela Moreni, a senior majoring in mechanical engineering at MSU. "That was amazing."

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This is so typical of a sign in, which we should not have to do to check if we or some one in our party got a permit. I have been working or "creating an account" for 30 minutes and just get the same ...

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